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  1. Michele Angelo Besso (Riesbach, 25 May 1873 – Geneva, 15 March 1955) was a Swiss-Italian engineer best known for working closely with Albert Einstein. Biography [ edit ] Besso was born in Riesbach from a family of Italian Jewish ( Sephardi ) descent. [2]

    • Michele Besso, 25 May 1873
    • 15 March 1955 (aged 81)
  2. Nov 14, 2017 · In the evenings after work, the two friends would stroll home together, and many years later Einstein would remember how thoughts of everyday life would fall away as they discussed scientific subjects. When Einstein changed the world of physics for ever in 1905 with four groundbreaking papers, Michele Besso was his only acknowledged collaborator.

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  4. The warmth and openness of their friendship were captured in Einstein’s letters to Besso. Besso was born into an Italian-Jewish family in May 1873 in Zurich. He was an engineer, but he had a philosophical fascination with physics. Besso grew up in Italy and was brilliant in mathematics, although at 16, he was suspended from school when he ...

  5. Einstein's closest friend, Michele Besso. Michele Besso with his bride Anna, 1898. Einstein tried out his radical new ideas in arguments with his unassuming friend, an "extraordinarily fine mind." You can EXIT to hear a talk ("Jottings of a Genius") on Besso's help to Einstein. Return to Great Works II.

  6. Nov 16, 2015 · Here we tell the story of how their insights were woven into the final version of the theory. Two friends from Einstein's student days — Marcel Grossmann and Michele Besso — were particularly ...

    • Michel Janssen, Jürgen Renn
    • 2015
  7. Dec 1, 1972 · It was Einstein who recommended his friend Besso for a job at the patent office and the two friends worked alongside each other, examining patent applications and talking about oth er things ...

  8. Jul 1, 2005 · Translated and annotated by Bertram Schwarzschild Einstein writes to Besso, his close friend since 1897, six months after completing the general theory of relativity and a few days after the death, at age 42, of Karl Schwarzschild, who found the first exact solutions of the theory’s field equations. Berlin, 14 May 1916.

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